Chapter22-Art Appreciation
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Transcript of Chapter22-Art Appreciation
![Page 1: Chapter22-Art Appreciation](https://reader036.fdocuments.in/reader036/viewer/2022081504/5554085eb4c90544428b51c2/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Between World Wars
Chapter 22
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DADA
• Began as a protest to the horrors of WWI• Dadaists believed that the horrors of war were caused by traditional values
• Dada was a nonsense word that became a rallying cry with an ambiguous meaning
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Hannah Hoch
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Hannah Hoch
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• A slap to traditional standard of beauty
• LHOOQ-translates to “she has a hot tail”
• Controversial “readymade” art was often just an altered object
• Once he signed a snow shovel and gave it a name and that was his art piece!
Marcel Duchamp
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Surrealism
• These artist did not like the modern reliance on science
• They focused on the importance of dreams, fantasies, and hallucinations
• They were also heavily influenced by the psychology of Sigmund Freud
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Salvador Dali
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Salvador Dali
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Salvador Dali
• Painted his nightmares
• Highly realistic yet improbable
• Extremely high academic technique of untraditional subject matter
• It is said that Salvador Dali would sleep holding a spoon over a pan and when he would inevitably drop the spoon, he would wake up mid dream and be able to use those images in his paintings
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Renee Magritte
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Renee Magritte
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Latin Amercian Modernism
• Art began to reflect Afro-Brazilian traditions, Cubism, abstraction, and there was often interdisciplinary art form combined
• Frida Khalo• Was adopted by the surrealists• Her style was surreal, but had strong roots in the Folk art of Mexico
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Frida Khalo
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American Regionalism
• Coincided with the depression era• People were relatively indifferent to art at this time
• Local subject matter• These artists were using everyday people and places as their subject matter
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Copyright ©2011, ©2009 Pearson Prentice Hall Inc.
Grant Wood. American Gothic. 1930.29-1/4" × 24-1/2". 74.3 × 62.4 cm.
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American Gothic
• Crisp and realistic in style
• Grant Wood was having little success in Paris as a painter, so he returned to his hometown in Midwest America
• He wanted to capture the unique character of the people and land and how they lived
• Inspired by a house built by a local carpenter in what he thought was a rendition of Gothic architecture